SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 3,
September 2012,
pp. 779-793
Summary
We introduce an accurate cell-centered method for modeling Darcy flow on
general quadrilateral, hexahedral, and simplicial grids. We refer to these
discretizations as the multipoint-flux mixed-finite-element (MFMFE) method. The
MFMFE method is locally conservative with continuous fluxes and can be viewed
within a variational framework as a mixed finite-element method with special
approximating spaces and quadrature rules. We study two versions of the method:
with a symmetric quadrature rule on smooth grids and a nonsymmetric quadrature
rule on rough grids. The framework allows for handling hexahedral grids with
nonplanar faces defined by trilinear mappings from the reference cube.
Moreover, the MFMFE method allows for local elimination of the velocity, which
leads to a cell-centered pressure system. Theoretical and numerical results
demonstrate first-order convergence on rough grids. Second-order
superconvergence is observed on smooth grids. We also discuss a new splitting
scheme for modeling multiphase flows that can treat higher-order transport
discretizations for saturations. We apply the MFMFE method to obtain physically
consistent approximations to the velocity and a reference pressure on
quadrilateral or hexahedral grids, and a discontinuous Galerkin method for
saturations. For higher-order saturations, we propose an efficient
post-processing technique that gives accurate velocities in the interior of the
gridblocks. Computational results are provided for flow in highly heterogeneous
reservoirs, including different capillary pressures arising from different rock
types.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
14 December 2010
- Meeting paper published:
22 February 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
1 September 2011
- Manuscript approved:
8 November 2011
- Published online:
29 August 2012
- Version of record:
12 September 2012